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91ƵA very sore throat91Ƶ: 6-foot sturgeon found with fish stuck in mouth in Fraser River

Sturgeon conservation group can91Ƶt rule out cannibalism to explain sturgeon in sturgeon sighting
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Fraser River Sturgeon Conservation Society volunteer Colin Bond had never seen anything like it. He photographed this large sturgeon floating with a smaller sturgeon in its mouth on Feb. 5, 2022 near Fort Langley. (Colin Bond/FRSCS Facebook)

A large sturgeon was spotted floating on its back in the lower Fraser River recently with a juvenile sturgeon down its throat.

Given the possibility it was an act of cannibalism due to scarce food sources for white sturgeon in the Fraser right now, it91Ƶs a big concern, according to officials with the Fraser River Sturgeon Conservation Society.

Sturgeon tagger Colin Bond of Surrey made the discovery. He91Ƶs fished the Fraser for 30 years, and is also a volunteer for the Sturgeon Conservation Society, sampling and tagging the dinosaur fish for the society for more than a dozen years.

91ƵI have seen many interesting and surprising sights, but I had never seen anything like this,91Ƶ Bond said.

He launched his boat near the Golden Ears bridge on Feb. 5. He observed the extremely strange sight while motoring upstream near Fort Langley.

Moving in he saw it was large adult sturgeon, approximately 160 centimetres (nearly 6 feet) in fork length (FL), which is the measurement in a line from the tip of the fish91Ƶs nose, to the fork in the tail.

Protruding from the sturgeon91Ƶs mouth was the tail of a smaller, juvenile sturgeon. It was wedged in past the gums and down the throat of the larger fish.

91ƵNeither fish was moving. The large fish appeared to be rather thin and skinny for its size. I circled around the fish and took a few pictures,91Ƶ Bond said.

They were still, and appeared dead but they weren91Ƶt.

91ƵThen suddenly the tail of the small fish started to twitch. It was alive!91Ƶ

Bong had the sling in place. When he reached over the side of the boat and grabbed the sturgeon by its right pectoral fin, it jolted, appearing to come 91Ƶback to life.91Ƶ

The big fish jerked, thrashed and flipped over, with the smaller one still in its mouth.

91ƵIt swam off and then down, and out of sight. It came to the surface briefly and made one final splash, then went under, and I never saw either fish again,91Ƶ Bond recounted.

Sturgeon Conservation Society officials say the whole episode is very concerning, given the decreased food supply issues in the Fraser right now, and relentless decline of white sturgeon numbers in the Fraser since 2006.

91ƵThis observation of possibly cannibalistic behaviour is a first for adult fish,91Ƶ said Sarah Shreier, executive director of the Fraser River Sturgeon Conservation Society.

It comes on the heels of a stressed environment in the mighty Fraser.

91ƵIt91Ƶs a big concern for the overall health of the Fraser River,91Ƶ she said. Research indicates the sturgeon population is projected to continue to decline unless the health of the river vastly improves.

91ƵWe know fish do this when there is a low food supply, and there is definitely low food for sturgeon in the Fraser given the issues with salmon and eulachon,91Ƶ Shreier said. 91ƵSo although we haven91Ƶt seen it before, it is possible due to those factors. Lots of other aquatic species also do this when they are short on food.91Ƶ

They won91Ƶt ever know for sure.

Bond motored around looking to see if the fish had resurfaced after witnessing the rare sight. Eventually he continued upstream to his fishing location for the day, and when he returned downstream, he searched the banks of the river near the area where he91Ƶd seen the pair of sturgeon.

91ƵI did not see them again, Bond said, adding he hoped they survived.

91ƵI know I will be keeping an eye out for a six-foot sturgeon with a very, very sore throat, and a smaller one with a serious headache.91Ƶ

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Jennifer Feinberg

About the Author: Jennifer Feinberg

I have been a Chilliwack Progress reporter for 20+ years, covering city hall, Indigenous, business, and climate change stories.
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